Sekiro: Accessibility in Games is About Far More than 'Difficulty' - An accessibility expert weighs in on how accessibility in games is vital, and 'difficulty' is relative.

How would that be incompatible with the established laws of the Soulsbourne series?

So why not just stick to the way the games already are?

The important part is to satisfy customers

But they do satisfy customers. They don't satisfy you, but apparently you're not their target audience.

Why wouldn't I if it conflicts with my goal of having the game I want to play?

Really.

and if a game developer can satisfy more customers by offering alternative options, then he should do so.

Sure it is, it's preventing me from playing a game that I would enjoy in that altered format.

You're not their target audience. Death metal isn't for everyone. Drum & Bass isn't for everyone. Movies like Oldboy or Chasing the Dragon aren't for everyone. Ghost in the Shell isn't for everyone. Dwarf Fortress isn't for everyone. iRacing isn't for everyone.

Do i need to go on?

If something is not for you, it's not for you. If you can't enjoy something because it's missing a specific feature, enjoy something else which has that feature. It's not like there's a lack of games in this day and age.

This entire thing is like stepping into Restaurant Gordon Ramsay (a business which makes money, so it fits) and demanding a greasy burger with some chips and nachos "because the customer wants it", with the reasoning behind it being that Mcdonalds does it and makes more money than that restaurant does.

Then why not just go to Mcdonalds instead? Because obviously Ramsay is completely missing the mark and should immediately change the menu to suit your personal tastes in order to "reach more people".

Or a more poignant example: You like music, as long as they're easy listening love ballads. You don't like death metal band X, because they don't make love ballads. You demand that they make love ballads because "they can reach more people that way".

Why would games be different?

TLDR: Your sense of entitlement is really on show in your latest response. Either that, or you are working somewhere in a junior management/marketing job, which would explain everything you've said so far.

/r/Games Thread Parent Link - ign.com